Course Content
JRF Horticulture

Major Soils of India

India has diverse soil types due to varied climate, topography, parent rock, and biological activity. Indian soils are broadly categorized into 8 major groups based on their formation, characteristics, and geographical distribution.

 

  1. Alluvial Soil
  • Extent: ~40% of India’s total area (largest)
  • States: Punjab, Haryana, UP, Bihar, WB, Assam, parts of Gujarat, Rajasthan
  • Formation: Deposited by rivers (Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra)
  • Sub-types:
    • Khadar (new): Fertile, light-colored, found in floodplains
    • Bhangar (old): Dark, more clayey, contains kankar nodules
  • Texture: Sandy loam to clay loam
  • Fertility: Rich in potash, phosphoric acid, and lime but poor in nitrogen and phosphorus
  • Crops: Rice, wheat, sugarcane, pulses, oilseeds
  • Soil Orders: Entisols, Inceptisols

 

  1. Black Soil (Regur Soil)
  • Extent: ~15% of India’s area
  • States: Maharashtra, MP, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu
  • Formation: Weathering of basalt (Deccan Traps)
  • Texture: Clayey, deep, cracks in summer (shrink-swell behavior)
  • Characteristics:
    • High water retention
    • Rich in calcium, magnesium, iron
    • Poor in nitrogen, phosphorus
    • High CEC (40–60 meq/100g) due to montmorillonite clay
  • Crops: Cotton, soybean, sorghum, pulses
  • Soil Order: Vertisols

 

  1. Red Soil
  • Extent: ~10% of India’s area
  • States: Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, parts of MP
  • Formation: Weathering of igneous and metamorphic rocks
  • Color: Red due to ferric oxide; yellow in hydrated form
  • Texture: Sandy to loamy
  • Fertility:
    • Poor in nitrogen, phosphoric acid, humus
    • Moderate in potash
  • Crops: Millets, groundnut, cotton, pulses
  • Soil Orders: Alfisols, Ultisols, Inceptisols

 

  1. Laterite Soil
  • Extent: ~3.7% of India’s area
  • States: Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Odisha, Assam
  • Formation: Intense leaching under high rainfall and temperature
  • Texture: Porous, soft when wet, hard when dry
  • Composition: Rich in iron and aluminium oxides
  • Fertility: Poor in lime, potash, and nitrogen
  • Crops: Tea, coffee, cashew with proper management
  • Soil Orders: Alfisols, Ultisols, Oxisols

 

  1. Desert (Arid) Soil
  • Extent: ~4.4% of India’s area
  • States: Rajasthan, Gujarat, Punjab, Haryana
  • Formation: Aeolian (wind-blown) sands
  • Color: Light brown to yellowish
  • Texture: Sandy to loamy sand
  • Fertility: Low organic matter and moisture
  • Features:
    • High soluble salts
    • Often calcareous (caliche layer present)
  • Crops: With irrigation – bajra, pulses, guar
  • Soil Order: Aridisols

 

  1. Mountain or Forest Soil
  • Extent: Found in Himalayan and hilly regions
  • States: Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, NE states
  • Formation: Weathering of rocks under forest cover
  • Fertility: Variable – rich in organic matter but may be acidic and shallow
  • Crops: Tea, apple, maize, barley
  • Soil Orders: Inceptisols, Alfisols, Entisols

 

  1. Saline and Alkaline Soil
  • Occurrence: Arid and semi-arid regions, waterlogged plains
  • States: UP, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab, Bihar
  • Causes: Poor drainage, excessive irrigation, capillary rise
  • pH: >8.5 (alkaline)
  • Characteristics:
    • White crust on surface
    • Low fertility
  • Reclamation: Gypsum, green manuring, leaching

 

  1. Peaty and Marshy Soils
  • Occurrence: Waterlogged, swampy areas
  • States: Kerala (Kuttanad), coastal Bengal, parts of Odisha, Bihar
  • Formation: Accumulation of organic matter in wet conditions
  • Characteristics:
    • Dark in color, high organic matter (>20%)
    • Poor drainage
  • Crops: Paddy, coconut (after management)

 

Soil Order – Indian Soil Type Mapping 

Soil Order

Indian Soil Type

Key Regions

Entisols

Alluvial, Desert

Indo-Gangetic Plains, Rajasthan

Inceptisols

Alluvial, Red, Forest

Himalayan foothills, Eastern states

Vertisols

Black (Regur)

Maharashtra, MP, Gujarat

Alfisols

Red, Laterite

South India, Chhattisgarh, Odisha

Ultisols

Red, Laterite

WB, Assam, parts of NE and South India

Oxisols

Laterite

Kerala, Karnataka (very limited)

Aridisols

Desert

Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana

Histosols

Peaty, Marshy

Kerala, Sundarbans

 

Exam-Focused Quick Facts

  • Most fertile soil: Alluvial
  • Most moisture-retentive soil: Black soil
  • Most leached soil: Laterite
  • Youngest soil: Alluvial (Entisols)
  • Organic soil: Histosols (Peaty/marshy)
  • Desert soils: Aridisols – sandy, low fertility
  • Red color due to: Iron oxide
  • Regur soils: High in montmorillonite (shrink-swell clay)

 

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